This Actress Just Became the 10th Highest-Grossing Movie Star Ever

Scarlett Johansson, known for her roles in box office hits like the Avengers and Captain America, just joined the list of the top 10 highest-grossing movie stars of all time.

According to data from Box Office Mojo, Johansson is the 10th highest-grossing movie star ever, coming in at $3.3 billion (not adjusted for inflation), trailing just behind Michael Caine and Johnny Depp. What’s perhaps even more notable is that Johansson is the only woman in the top 10.

Johansson joins her Avengers co-stars Samuel L. Jackson who is No. 2 on the list, and Robert Downey, Jr. who is 5th on the list. At just 31 years old, she is youngest on the list by 20 years. What makes her place even more impressive, however, is that it combines the domestic box office revenue of an actors entire filmography, according to TheWrap.

“It is staggering when you take into account how young she is,” Rotten Tomatoes senior editor Grae Drake told TheWrap.

By comparison, Jennifer Lawrence appeared much lower on the list, coming in at No. 55. Despite the lower number for the Hunger Games star, she still pulled a gross of $2.3 billion. Lawrence was also ranked the highest-paid actress in 2015, with a pre-tax pay of $52 million.

Despite climbing the gross-pay ladder, Johansson still has a ways to go before she can break through the glass ceiling. She was No. 65 on the Forbes’ World’s Highest Paid Celebrities in 2015 list, earning about $35.5 million, compared to her Avengers co-star, Robert Downey, Jr., who made $80 million and is tied with Taylor Swift for No. 8.

The investigation was initiated by the American Civil Liberties Union, which collected testimonials from over 50 female directors who reported sexist practices such as almost male-only “short lists” which were compiled by various studios.

Women also made up just 9% of all directors for the top 250 grossing films last year, according to the annual Celluloid Ceiling Report released by the University of Southern California. The ACLU says this number indicates a systemic bias, as defined by the Supreme Court.

Female directors do succeed, as do their films. Some of 2015’s biggest hits were Sam Taylor-Johnson’s Fifty Shades of Grey, Elizabeth Banks’ Pitch Perfect 2 and Nancy Meyers’ The Intern. Unfortunately, however, they’re considered the exception, not the rule.